Top Ten Books I Had VERY Strong Emotions About

Yet another Top Ten Tuesday I swore I’d get done on time…as always brought to you by The Broke and the Bookish. The topic for this week: Top Ten Books I Had VERY Strong Emotions About

1. The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger Only the second time around did I find myself emotional over this book, but I won’t rehash that here since I reviewed it earlier this year.

2. Here on Earth by Alice Hoffman I think this is the only Oprah’s Book Club pick I’ve ever read. It was on sale at the library and I took it home with me. It was all beat up naturally. I read it…and even though I know I shouldn’t feel sorry for the person I’m crying for, I do all the same.

3. A Separate Peace by John Knowles WHY FINNY WHY *sob*

4. The Bitch Posse by Martha O’Connor So the book that changed the way I choose books also had me BAWLING like a baby in the last chapter.

5. The Ice Queen by Alice Hoffman You know I didn’t like this book all that much but I found myself crying toward the end.

6. Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell The ending to this book broke my heart in ways the movie never could. While I do feel Clark Gable is perfect in the role of Rhett Butler, the final scene between Rhett and Scarlett is so much sadder in the book, and even when he says “My dear, I don’t give a damn” (that’s right, there was no frankly in the book), it’s in such a defeated tone, and not the sardonic “Get bent, Wench!” tone that’s taken on in the film.

7. The Bad Seed by William March So I forgot to include this book in my Top 10 Disturbing Books list. I remember being really disturbed at a certain part and just flinging the book aside because I couldn’t deal. To be fair, the book isn’t particularly graphic but there’s one brief description that’s never left my mind.

8. American Psycho by Bret Easton Ellis Oh infamous rat scene! Let’s just say that was NOT the scene I was most horrified by, probably because I had already heard about it. Oh no, I was deeply disgusted by another scene that literally caused me to fling the book away and squirm around a lot.

9. Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keys Cheating a bit with this one as I haven’t actually read more than a couple of pages. Why? Because I KNOW me. There are two guaranteed ways to make me cry while reading: 1) kill off a dog 2) write about someone who is mentally challenged (this is one of the reasons I cannot deal with Of Mice and Men either). I’ve only read a bit toward the end of this novel, but it had me practically bawling in the middle of the bookstore…so I think it’s safe to say I won’t be touching this one….ever.

10. The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton You know what Edith? I love you, but fuck you and your gutwrenching endings!

30 Day Book Meme: Day 17

Day 17 – Favorite quote from your favorite book

I like how this question comes before the question of what’s your all time favorite book. Smooth 30 Day Meme…smoooooth. I’m just going to go with a few of my favorite quotes which may or may not be from my favorite book(s), you’ll just have to wait til Day 30 to find out, nyah! :P

A stone has been cast into the reliable immutable pond of the past, and as the ripples subside everything appears different. The reflections are quite other; everything has swung and shattered, it is all beyond recovery.

–Penelope Lively, The Photograph

…it is dangerous to ignore the existence of the irrational. The more cultivated a person is, the more intelligent, the more repressed, then the more he needs some method of channeling the primitive impulses he’s worked so hard to subdue.

–Donna Tartt, The Secret History

In reality they all lived in a kind of hieroglyphic world, where the real thing was never said or done or even thought, but only represented by a set of arbitrary signs.

–Edith Wharton, The Age of Innocence

Previously on the 30 Day Book Meme →

30 Day Book Meme: Day 10

Day 10 – Favorite classic book
Jeez, just one?! HOW CAN I POSSIBLY CHOOSE? Also, how is classic defined? It’s harder than it seems! Franny and Zooey is my favorite Salinger book but it’s not read in classrooms as consistently as The Catcher in the Rye. Ada, or Ardor is my favorite Nabokov but I don’t know if I’d call it a classic in the same way that Lolita is. Tough questions aside, I’m going to go with one that is undeniably a classic and sits on that “shelf beside my bed” (which isn’t actually a shelf but a pile of books within arm’s reach): The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton

More than any other classic novel, The Age of Innocence has had a lasting effect on me — at one point my novel-in-perpetual-progress was a modern reworking of The Age of Innocence. Arguably it still is. Regardless, since reading it for a class in college (called “Lives Ruined by Literature”), it’s been one of my favorite novels, and one I turn to again and again.

Previously on the 30 Day Book Meme →

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